April 20, 2013

August 04, 2014

August 30, 2014

It's two weeks before the June 25 National Basketball Association draft, and Indiana Pacers head coach Jim O'Brien is leaving
the house early.

But the
third-year Pacers coach isn't off to watch video, conduct player tryouts, or meet with scouts in preparation for the
upcoming draft. That will have to wait.

Instead, O'Brien is off to a 7 a.m. meeting with Coalition for Homelessness Intervention and Prevention Executive Director
Timothy Joyce and some of the local not-for-profit's board members.

"This is a busy time of year," said O'Brien, looking around his subterranean Conseco
Fieldhouse office cluttered with three video monitors, stacks of player videotapes, and mounds of draft
prospect notes. "Lots of long days."

But O'Brien, who himself became a CHIP board member shortly after arriving in town in 2007, said he
always makes time for his chosen charity work. The lifelong coach, who has a daughter with Down's Syndrome,
is also an advocate and volunteer for organizations serving people with special needs.

Like former Indianapolis Colts Coach Tony Dungy,
O'Brien has eschewed commercial opportunities, instead devoting himself to coaching and charity work.

"I'm not saying I've had a lot of commercial
opportunities; it's not like that for NBA coaches the way it is for NFL coaches," O'Brien said.
"But I'd rather devote my time to the causes that mean the most to me, and hopefully where I can be the greatest
service to my community."

Next on O'Brien's charity to-do list is his involvement in CHIP's annual July count of the city's homelessa kind of
census that helps determine what city services and resources are needed. O'Brien and his wife plan to
be in the trenches helping with the head count. Then there's the Sept. 16 Blueprint Celebration, a fund-raiser
and event to recognize local residents who help the homeless.

O'Brien began devoting time to homeless initiatives while coaching the Philadelphia 76ers in 2004.
O'Brien, one of eight children raised in a devout Catholic home, met Sister Mary Scullion, co-founder
of nationally renowned Project Home, a Philadelphia-based not-for-profit devoted to serving chronically
homeless and low-income individuals.

O'Brien, whose two aunts are missionary nunsone in India, the other in Peruunderstands the importance of community
service, said Pacers President Jim Morris.

"We're challenged as Christians to be aware of the most needy," O'Brien said. "That's
the way I was brought up, and meeting with Sister Mary strengthened my desire to reach out to this segment
of the population."

O'Brien met with then-mayor Bart Peterson shortly after being hired by the Pacers, and mentioned his work with homeless initiatives
in Philadelphia.

"The
next thing I know, I've got a pamphlet for CHIP showing up in my office," O'Brien said with a broad smile.

When Joyce, the CHIP executive director, was
told of O'Brien's willingness to help, he wasn't sure what to think.

"There are celebrities who will lend their name to causes and there are those who simply
write checks, and we're appreciative of that," Joyce said. "But I had no idea the extent to
which Coach O'Brien would become a part of this organization."

O'Brien attends fund-raisers, gives motivational speeches to CHIP board members and volunteers,
and works in homeless shelters and soup kitchens alongside his wife, Sharon.

"That level of commitment from someone of his
profile is pretty rare," Joyce said.

O'Brien's impact on the 13-year-old organization is sizable, Joyce said. He recalled a day last March when O'Brien showed
up the morning of a Pacers game to talk to 636 volunteers.

The assist from the basketball coach is coming at the right time. According to CHIP research,
there are more than 75 percent more homeless families counted in central Indiana this year than last
year.

"Sitting here,
it sounds like we're talking about a third-world country, doesn't it?" O'Brien said from inside the Fieldhouse.
"Yet you can go two blocks in any direction from here and see it. We can't allow it to continue."

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Schoettle grew up in Indianapolis, graduating from Southport High School and Indiana University. He then departed on a tour of middle Indiana, reporting for papers in Greenwood, Frankfort, Columbus and Franklin before landing at IBJ in 1998. At his previous jobs, he spent a decade as a political and government reporter. Beyond writing, Schoettle’s passions include animals and wildlife, watching all manner of television and long-distance cycling and running. Though he put away his trumpet many years ago, he remains an avid music fan. Schoettle shares his home in Southport with his wife, Elizabeth, three salty dogs and three sweet cats. Preferring to live in a “park-like setting,” one of his primary goals each spring and summer is to see how seldom he can mow his front lawn.

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